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The Godspeaker Trilogy

Page 167

by Karen Miller


  “Thank you, Han.” Treading softly, Rhian closed the distance between them, and rested her clenched fist gently on his chest. “The Queen of Ethrea won't forget Tzhung-tzhungchai's greatest emperor.”

  Han smiled. Snapped his fingers. In a gust of wind he stepped back…and disappeared.

  Relieved and exhausted, she returned to Alasdair in their privy apartments.

  “Han agreed?” he asked, pulling off her boots.

  “He agreed,” she said, breathing the rich aroma of gravied beef and buttered pumpkin. “And I begin to believe we might stand a chance.”

  Alasdair paused, his warm hand on her ankle. “You didn't before?”

  “Let's eat,” she suggested. “Before I faint from hunger.”

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

  Helfred was disappointed, but not truly surprised, when Rhian and Alasdair failed to appear in Kingseat's great chapel for Litany. He had to make do with the presence of Dukes Edward, Rudi and Ludo. Adric was absent too, and must be scolded for it, for only once had he bothered to take his place in the pews reserved for Ethrea's privy council.

  And then, of course, there was Mister Jones. Dexterity. God's most unlikely messenger. Rumpled and threadbare, he sat with Ursa in the privy pews, lightly frowning, listening as the prolate he'd anointed sang Rhian's praises, again. Thanked God for Ethrea's courage, again. Cultivated the seeds of readiness for danger, again.

  Surely I must sing a different song, soon. Soon my dear people must be woken from their dreams of safety.

  Thinking of it broke his heart. The pain of his own waking hadn't passed. He felt it still, the loss of his innocence. The anger, the disbelief, the slow crushing acceptance, that God could not protect them from everything. That the world was vaster and stranger and more cruel than he'd ever suspected.

  Murdering priests of Mijak. Sorcerous witch-men of Tzhung-tzhungchai. Even Dexterity, bursting into flames. Only scant months ago my life was so ordered. And now it's in disarray. It lies in pieces around me.

  As the choristers' sweet voices soared to the chapel's rafters, he stared at his beautiful bound copy of Rollin's Admonitions , open before him on the pulpit. Admonition 24 leapt to his eye.

  The past lies behind us. The future is unwritten. Do not cling to the past, for it is an anchor. Do not fear the future, for fear kills hope and blinds us to possibilities.

  A timely reminder, perhaps. Was he indeed allowing fear to kill his hope, to blind him? Was his fear of the unknown, of Zandakar and the witch-men's strange powers, preventing him from seeing they were indeed Godsent, as Dexterity claimed?

  He didn't know. He didn't know . And that was the worst part. He was being asked for a leap of faith…when he'd never had to leap before.

  Behind him, Ven'Thomas cleared his throat suggestively. Looking up, Helfred realised the choristers had finished their final hymn and the congregation was staring at him, curious.

  “Ah,” he said, uncomfortably aware he'd turned an unbecoming pink. “Thus is concluded our service this evening. God's blessings upon you, and the peace of Rollin. Pray for our brave queen, her stalwart husband, and our realm's privy council, charged with the most grave duty of its protection.”

  And so another Litany was ended.

  Afterwards, once he'd spoken with his congregation as they left the chapel, and favoured Dexterity with a solemn smile, he returned to the castle and his own privy chapel. He needed solitude again. A chance to clear his mind and open his heart in the hope that a final answer to his fears would come.

  Heedless of bruised knees, he knelt on the cold chapel floor and stared into the heart of God's Living Flame. Stared with his own heart open, his mind emptied of fears and thoughts, waiting, waiting, for the truth to be revealed. The chapel's silence was profound. All he could hear was his breathing, and the soothing, monotonous rattle of his wooden prayer beads, click-click-clicking between his restless fingers. His vision blurred. His breathing slowed. One by one, his prayer beads clicked to a stop.

  A hesitant hand pressed on his shoulder. A voice said, “Helfred. Helfred, turn round.”

  Stirring out of his trance-like daze, he turned. And shrieked. And fell over.

  It was his dead uncle, Marlan. The former Prolate of Ethrea.

  “Helfred, Helfred,” said his uncle, hands uplifted, palms out. “Do not be afraid. I've not come to harm you.”

  Choking with fright, Helfred scuttled backwards on his rump till his spine struck the chapel altar. The last time he'd seen Marlan, his uncle was going up in flames. Before that hideous moment there'd been cruelty and violence. Depravity. Sin. Marlan had ordered Kingseat's soldiers to kill Rhian.

  “This isn't possible,” he whispered. “I'm dreaming, I must be.”

  “Rather call it a vision,” said Marlan. “An answer to your prayers, nephew.” His austere face softened into a diffident smile. “Or should I say, Your Eminence?”

  Helfred smeared a hand across his face. His heart thundered so loudly he was afraid it would burst. “Helfred,” he panted. “Call me Helfred…if you're real.”

  “Real enough,” said Marlan, shrugging. “And only come for a short time.”

  Calming a little, Helfred was able to see more than Marlan's unburned face. Was able to take in the extraordinary fact that his immaculate, magnificent proletary uncle was dressed in a penitent's shift, a simple unadorned tunic of undyed linen, ragged about neckline, hem and sleeves. His feet were shod in a pair of simple leather sandals, his fingers bare of rings, his chest without ropes of gold and jewelled medallions. He looked more humble than a chaplain. More insignificant than a novice devout.

  “I see from your face that I am greatly different,” said Marlan, softly.

  Well, yes, uncle. The last time I saw you, you were burned to a crisp . “Ah – you seem to me less angry,” Helfred ventured. “Have you found peace at last? Have you rediscovered God?”

  Marlan released a slow, heavy sigh. “Nephew, how could I rediscover what I never before knew? Alas, I was a venal man. Proud and sinful and steeped in malice. My God was wealth and power. I worshipped myself. Now I strive to undo the wrongs I have done. To make amends for the pain I caused.”

  “Uncle…” Helfred swallowed. His mouth was so dry. “Please. Tell me. Have you seen God ?”

  Marlan laughed. Had he ever laughed like that before? Without cruelty, without sarcasm, with genuine joy? Helfred couldn't remember it.

  “Nephew,” said his uncle, “it's not given to me that I can answer such a question, or reveal the truths of what lies beyond life. Every man will make that journey, and his discoveries, in his time.”

  “Then why are you here?”

  “To give you the answer to your prayers, Helfred,” said Marlan. “I'm here to tell you the toymaker is right. The witch-men of Tzhung-tzhungchai commit no sins. At least, not the kind of sins you're worried about.”

  “You mean it's safe to trust them?”

  “They do not serve the dark power of Mijak. Neither does Zandakar. And both are needed if Ethrea is to prevail.”

  Helfred wiped his sweat-slicked palms down the front of his chaplain's robes. Who could ever have thought he'd feel well-dressed, next to Marlan?

  “And will we prevail, uncle? Will Mijak be defeated?”

  Marlan sighed again, so sorrowful. “Remember Rollin's admonition, nephew. The future is un-written.”

  “You mean you don't know?” he cried, anguished. “ God doesn't know?”

  “How can God know?” Marlan chided. “When men have free will to do as they please?”

  Well, this wasn't the answer he'd been seeking. He wanted certainty, he wanted assurance, he wanted to know Ethrea would survive and that Mijak, defeated, would be driven from the world.

  “Alas,” said Marlan. “The future is unwritten.”

  Helfred groped to his feet. “At least tell me there's hope, uncle. Tell me we won't be fighting in vain.”

  Marlan smiled then, so sweetly. He seemed another man entirel
y. “There is always hope, Helfred. Know that, and believe it. There is always hope .”

  A breeze sighed through the chapel…and Marlan was gone.

  “Uncle?” said Helfred tentatively, into the silence. “Uncle, are you still here?”

  No reply. He turned to stare at his chapel's Living Flame. “Did that just happen, God, or was I truly dreaming?”

  The Flame burned serenely, keeping its secrets.

  Helfred wandered out of his chapel and accosted the first novice he found. It was young Norbert, polishing a section of wooden staircase handrail for a penance.

  “Norbert!”

  The novice dropped his cloth and tin of beeswax. “Your Eminence!” he gasped, plunging to his knees.

  “Norbert, am I awake?”

  Norbert's mouth shaped itself into a small circle of surprise. “Ah…yes, Your Eminence, you're awake.”

  Helfred sighed. “I suspected as much.”

  He returned to his privy chapel and lowered himself onto its solitary pew. His hands were still trembling.

  Well, I asked for an answer to my prayers, and I received one. I just never expected it to be delivered in person.

  Should he go to Rhian and tell her of Marlan's message? It wasn't so very late, doubtless she'd still be awake. And he knew full well how distressed he'd made her in council, refusing to support Zandakar and Han's witch-men as allies.

  On the other hand, the poor girl needed her rest. He'd tell her in the morning. His night would be better spent in prayer. He slid off the pew and once more to his knees, humble before the Living Flame, determined to pray until the sun rose again.

  Before meeting with her privy council the next morning, Rhian dressed in a duplicate set of the black leather doublet, leggings and low boots, now ruined, that she'd worn to slay the dukes Damwin and Kyrin. She wore a single dragon-eye ruby on a chain, and her simple gold circlet. Once again, her curling hair was cut close. Ranald's tigereye knife was sheathed at her hip. Staring at herself in her mirror, she nodded.

  See me, gentlemen. See me, world. I am Rhian of House Havrell, Queen of Ethrea. Chosen by God to defend the innocent, and the free.

  Alasdair's eyes warmed when she joined him in their parlour. “My love, you are formidable.”

  “Yes, Alasdair,” she said, unsmiling. “I am.”

  Together they walked to the privy council chamber, scattering courtiers and servants before them like chaff.

  He looked at her sidelong, curious. “You're different. It's not just that you've shorn yourself again. It's something else. Something…inward. What's changed?”

  She shrugged. “I believe.”

  “In our cause?” he said, bemused.

  The hotas she'd danced with Zandakar at first light had been fierce. Fiercer than any she'd danced before. She'd danced as though her life depended on it, as though Zandakar were a true enemy of Ethrea. Dancing without mercy he'd pushed her, pursued her, demanded from her the kind of speed and agility and ferocity she hadn't known she possessed. As though all the hotas she'd danced until that moment were nothing more than slow training exercises, designed to bring her to this pitch.

  And somewhere in that dancing she had seen herself through his eyes. Through his belief. She saw herself through God's eyes…and knew her time had come.

  Now she smiled. “In me.”

  The council, warned of her approach, was on its feet as she entered the chamber. Zandakar was there, and Dexterity. They stood together, comfortable with each other as the others were not. Such an unlikely pair, they were: Zandakar tall and dark, his unbound blue hair eerie, dressed in sober Ethrean linen and wool. Dexterity short and rumpled, his beard unkempt and his shabby coat with a darn in one elbow. And yet both men were men of strange powers. Sent by God to aid her.

  Sweet Rollin, my life is grown monstrous strange.

  “Gentlemen!” she said briskly, striding through the open doorway. “Be seated. I shan't keep you long, I know you have much to do. Helfred—”

  He hesitated halfway to sitting. “Yes, Your Majesty?”

  As she took her chair, and Alasdair took his, and the guards outside the chamber pulled its doors closed, she fixed her former chaplain with a cool stare. “You've had sufficient time, I think, to consider your position. I must have your answer regarding Zandakar and Tzhung-tzhungchai.”

  And if it's the wrong answer, then God help you. God help us all.

  But if she was different this morning, then so was her prolate. The anguish in Helfred's eyes was vanished, his pallor replaced by robust colour. Yesterday, in his protests, though young he'd seemed an old man. Now his movements were vigorous, his voice energetic.

  “I have indeed considered, Majesty,” he replied, sitting all the way down. “And reached a decision, moreover, in light of the counsel I received.”

  She resisted looking at Dexterity. “I know Mister Jones sought you out on the matter, Prolate. In case you're inclined to feel critical of his interference, you should know I asked him to.”

  “I did suspect as much,” said Helfred, dryly. “And Mister Jones was, as always, your stalwart champion. But he wasn't my only visitor.” He plucked his prayer beads from his belt and began his familiar, infuriating fiddling, click-click-clicking them through his busy fingers. “Someone else desired to speak with me on this important matter.”

  Rhian gritted her teeth, fighting the urge to snatch the beads from him and do something horrendous…like make him swallow them one by one.

  “Well, whoever it was, Prolate, I didn't send him. Or her. Please, would you just—”

  “I know you didn't, Majesty,” said Helfred. “God sent him. It was Marlan.”

  Silence in the privy council chamber. Rhian looked to Dexterity, who gaped like a fish. The rest of her council was equally stunned. Even Alasdair seemed shaken. Even Zandakar seemed unnerved.

  “Marlan?” she said at last, feeling sweat slick her skin beneath her supple new leathers. “Surely not, Helfred. Perhaps it was a dream.”

  “You mean a nightmare,” grunted Edward. “That wicked man?”

  Helfred's expression tightened. “Wicked in life he was, Your Grace, I cannot deny it. But he makes amends now. I'll thank you to say no more on that.”

  At the far end of the table, Dexterity cleared his throat. “He seemed…well?” he asked, diffident. Almost hopeful.

  “Well enough,” said Helfred. “Considering. He came to tell me I was wrong to doubt Zandakar and the witch-men of Tzhung-tzhungchai.”

  Though it was not yet noon, Rhian wished devoutly for a goblet of strong wine. Marlan, my champion? That can't be true .

  Rudi stirred in his chair, glowering. “Then I contend we have a problem, Your Majesty. For Marlan was a villainous piece of work, bent on your destruction. If indeed he appeared to Prolate Helfred, we can't trust a word he said.”

  She pushed to her feet and glared at her muttering council. “ Enough . Zandakar and Han are not my enemies. Prevarication is my enemy. Shilly-shallying and indecision, these are my enemies. Can it be that you, gentlemen, like the ambassadors, continue to hope this threat we face is exaggerated ? That we have the luxury of more debate, more denial, more time? We don't .”

  “Majesty,” said Ludo, as she began pacing the council chamber. “We don't deny the threat. But surely Rudi has a point. Marlan alive was no friend to Ethrea. Why should we assume that dead he's suddenly on our side? There are dark powers ranged against us. Can't he be some kind of – of demonic presence, sent to endanger you?”

  She was almost as fond of Ludo as Alasdair was, but she could slap him now. “You're talking like an illiterate, superstitious farmhand! You might as well call Hettie a demon, and be done with it.”

  “No, no,” Ludo protested with a glance at Dexterity. “I just think you should be wary of Han.”

  “I am wary of Han! He serves the Tzhung first and foremost. I'm not a fool. I do know that in aiding Ethrea he seeks only to aid himself. But if in aiding himself he helps save
the rest of us, why should I care? The cruel truth is that without him we're lost. Without Han and his witch-men there will be no armada .”

  “Which he knows,” said Edward. “His help will plunge Ethrea deep in his debt, Majesty. What price will we have to pay, when he calls the debt due?”

  “I have no idea, Edward, but whatever it is, I will pay it ,” she retorted. “I swear before God I'll be Han's concubine in Tzhung if that's what it takes to save us from Mijak!”

  Silence, again. Zandakar stared at her, his blue pale eyes tranquil. Beneath that tranquillity she thought she saw derision. She turned away, struggling not to lose her temper entirely.

  How foolish we must seem, bickering constantly like brats in a nursery. As a prince of Mijak he was used to instant obedience. Do I envy him that? The power to silence with a glance – or a knife, if pushed to it? Sometimes I think I do…

  “And it's not just Han that's suspect, if Marlan's counsel is suspect,” said Adric. “If it was Marlan. The emperor's not the only foreigner you're so eager to trust.”

  Rhian turned back, dumbfounded. Did I want to be queen? I must've been mad. “Can you be serious, Adric? Do you still insist upon doubting Zandakar? My God, man. What must he do to prove he's willing to die for Ethrea?”

  Adric shrugged. “He could die.”

  Before she could answer, Helfred surged to his feet. “You arrogant young fool! Is your manhood so weak you must see a stronger man cast down to feel brave? You know full well that without Zandakar to guide us our cause would be lost already. You're just too proud to admit it. Have a care, Your Grace: pride can choke a man, even to his death.”

  “Why do you chastise me, Prolate?” Adric retorted. “I've heard you doubt the heathen a score of times, in this very chamber!”

  “Yes, I have doubted,” said Helfred. “And I was wrong. Zandakar is God's gift against the evil of Mijak.”

  “Let God tell me that,” said Adric, “and perhaps I'll believe it.”

  “ Adric !” shouted Rudi, his face bright red. “Would you shame me? Would you bring disrepute upon our House? Your Eminence—”

 

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